Remaining with Jesus
Discipleship in the Gospel of John
FATHER S. BRICE HIGGINBOTHAM
Copyright © 2022 Father S. Brice Higginbotham All rights reserved.
Imprimatur: Very Reverend Patrick J. Madden Diocesan Administrator Diocese of Houma-Thibodaux 16 July 2022
Cover art credit: javi.ruiz/iStock/Getty Images, M-image/iStockphoto/Getty Images, Miodrag Kitanovic/iStockphoto/Getty Images, YuliaBuchatskaya/iStock/Getty Images.
Back cover author photo, Mary Baird at Three Otters Photogaphy.
Special thanks to Rockridge Press for permission to reprint from Daily Lessons from the Saints: 52 Weeks of Inspiration and Encouragement.
ISBN: 978-0-8294-5459-8 Library of Congress Control Number: 2022945646
Printed in the United States of America.
22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Versa 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
To Mr. Todd Richard, who first inspired in me a love for the Sacred Page; Fr. Cassian Elkins, OSB, who taught me how to receive spiritual nourishment from this Word; and to Dr. Brant Pitre, PhD, who witnessed to me the integration of a deep technical knowledge of historical criticism, a profound faith, and abiding holiness.
Part 1 Introduction................................................................................1
1 Discipleship in the Bible .....................................................................3
The Old Testament ..............................................................................4 The New Testament ............................................................................5 The Gospel according to John ...........................................................6 Dynamics of Discipleship....................................................................8 A Word about Language .....................................................................9 Getting the Most out of Remaining with Jesus ...............................11 Going Deeper.....................................................................................12
Part 2 The First Disciples................................................................13 2 The Disciples Meet Jesus | John 1 15 Andrew, the Other Disciple, and Simon Peter | John 1:29–42 15 Philip and Nathanael | John 1:43–51...............................................19 “Come and See” | John 1:39, 46 ......................................................20 Going Deeper.....................................................................................23 3 Discipleship Is a Process | John 2.....................................................25 The Disciples Believe | John 2:1–11 ................................................26 The Disciples Remain | John 2:12 ...................................................26 Belief without Remaining: The People of Jerusalem | John 2:23–25.............................................................................27 Liar, Lunatic, or Lord? .......................................................................28 Going Deeper.....................................................................................29
Part 3 The Path of Discipleship ...................................................31 4 Believe Like a Samaritan | John 4.....................................................33 Who Are the Samaritans?.................................................................33 A Harvest of Disciples | John 4:39–42.............................................34 The Woman at the Well | John 4:7–30 ............................................36 A Woman Disciple? ...........................................................................39 Going Deeper.....................................................................................41
Contents
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5 Work to Remain | John 6...................................................................43
Work and Gift | John 6:1–45 .............................................................43
Believing or Eating: Which Gives Eternal Life? | John 6:47–59 ....45
A Trial in Discipleship | John 6:60–71..............................................46 Going Deeper.....................................................................................49
6 Perseverance Leads to Devotion | John 9 ..........................................51
Work and Witness | John 9:1–18 .....................................................51
Persevering Belief | John 9:18–25....................................................53
Disciple of Jesus | John 9:26–41 .....................................................55 Going Deeper.....................................................................................60
7 Love One Another | John 13—17....................................................63
Home Forever | John 14:1–6, 15–17................................................64 To Believe and to Love | 1 John 3:23–24.........................................65 Bearing Fruit | John 15:1–17 66 Going Deeper.....................................................................................69
8 The Beloved Disciple | John 19—21 ..............................................71
Standing at the Foot of the Cross | John 19:25–37 ........................71 “He Took Her into his Own” | John 19:27 73
At the Tomb: The Disciple Who Believes | John 20:1–10 ..............74 On the Seashore: The Disciple Who Remains | John 21:20–25 75 Going Deeper.....................................................................................76 Conclusion...............................................................................................79
For Your Small Group 83 Practical Tips......................................................................................83 Going Deeper Possible Answers 85
Chapter 1: Discipleship in the Bible, ...............................................85
Chapter 2: The Disciples Meet Jesus, 86
Chapter 3: Discipleship Is a Process, .............................................88
Chapter 4: Believe like a Samaritan, 90
Chapter 5: Work to Remain, ............................................................92
Chapter 6: Perseverance leads to Devotion, 95
Chapter 7: Love One Another, .........................................................97
Chapter 8: The Beloved Disciple, ....................................................98 Bibliography 101 Acknowledgments 105 About the Author 107
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Discipleship in the Bible
This book is about discipleship—in particular, the picture of discipleship the Holy Spirit reveals to us in the Gospel according to John. In these pages, you will find the fourth Gospel’s answer to these questions: What does it mean to be a disciple of Jesus? How can we apply this knowledge to our own lives? How do we live as true disciples of the Lord? And finally, how do we know that we’re doing so?
There are few more intimidating goals than reaching for true discipleship. Who am I, you might be asking yourself, to think I can aspire to walk side by side with Jesus? One of the purposes of this book is to unpack the many ways Scripture suggests that this is exactly what our aspirations should be. The second purpose of this book is to unveil clear and practical ways to apply the New Testament teachings of the Lord so that, just like His earliest disciples, you, too, can journey with Jesus.
As we journey together, our road map is simple. First, we will briefly study the etymology and context of key words related to discipleship. Then, we will quickly turn our attention to the Gospel of John and proceed step-by-step through the narrative in the order that John set down his thoughts. We will see that these teachings can be summarized in a four-part program of discipleship, the core of which is believing and remaining in Jesus: first, someone gives witness to us
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about Jesus; second, we come to believe in Him ourselves; third, we remain with Jesus and He with us; and fourth, we give evidence of our discipleship by showing the love of Jesus to one another.
Unveiling the Scriptural essence of this concept of discipleship begins with, no surprise here, words. The key is to track down the subtle shadings of the pertinent Greek and Hebrew words within their context because this is how we get to the root of their intentional meanings. This is where my personal search began, and it is my privilege to share what I learned about discipleship with you.
The Old Testament
In the Old Testament, I found much less than I expected. There are times when a person lives as a disciple or student of some teacher or master, but these times are relatively few and much less central than they are in the Gospels. The Old Testament uses the usual Hebrew word for disciple (talmîd) one time and the other word for disciple (limmûd) four times.1 Discipleship did become important for the Jewish rabbis who were descended from the Pharisees of the New Testament period, but not until the second century after Christ. There are also other relationships in the Old Testament of masters and disciples in relationship with one another, but none of these scattered Old Testament prefigurations of discipleship captures the clear and consistent concept of discipleship that we see in the Gospels. Our search for the biblical understanding of discipleship, therefore, will be rooted in the New Testament.
1. John P. Meier, A Marginal Jew: Rethinking the Historical Jesus, vol. 3, Companions and Competitors (New Haven, London: Yale University Press, 2001), 42. The single use is merely to describe an apprentice musician in 1 Chronicles 25:8.
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The New Testament
While the word disciple (Gk. mathētēs) is used 261 times in the New Testament, it is found only in the Gospels and in the Acts of the Apostles (the sequel to Luke’s Gospel). It occurs exactly zero times in the remainder of the New Testament. Therefore, the only sections of the Scriptures in which the Greek word for disciple is used in a way relevant to our study are the Gospels and Acts.2
The substantial presence of the word disciple in just these books suggests that the concept of discipleship is of great importance for Jesus and the evangelists, and that it has some particular connection with the historical ministry of Jesus that, of course, overflows into the ministry of the Church. But what exactly was meant by this word disciple and, more important, this concept of discipleship? The words of Bible scholar Father John Meier are helpful:
As we begin our quest for an adequate definition, we need to remind ourselves that the religious rhetoric of modern Christianity often leads us to use the word “disciple” quite loosely. The drive to be relevant pushes pulpit oratory and theological musings to employ the word “disciple” in as many meanings or in as broad a sense as possible . . . Perhaps some might prefer to stick with their intuition. They would simply take for granted that, since the basic meaning of mathētēs is “learner” or “student,” a disciple of Jesus was anyone who listened to and learned the teachings of rabbi Jesus as one of his students. But the Gospels’ picture of Jesus’ disciples is not so simple.3
2. While it stands to reason that the New Testament concept of discipleship is informed by its Old Testament antecedents mentioned above, the vast usage of the concept and its circumscription into the single term μαθητής (mathētēs, “disciple”) within the Jesus movement indicates the centrality of the concept of discipleship for Jesus and His followers beyond the emphasis given to it in its Old Testament antecedents.
3. A Marginal Jew, 3:49–50.
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Discipleship in the Bible
Father Meier deduces that the absolute absence of the term disciple in the letters of Paul, the Catholic Epistles, and Revelation, along with the fact that it does not figure prominently in the writings of other early Christians, indicate that the term was historically used by Jesus and His disciples. In other words, the word disciple was actually used in the time of Jesus and not just written into the Gospels because it was being used in the early church.4
Each time the word disciple is used in the Gospel according to John, it is clear that in the time of Jesus, the wider public was familiar with the word. The word disciple was used to describe a person with some association to a public figure. For example, when Jesus was on trial before Annas the high priest and Peter denied Jesus, multiple servants as well as Annas himself make reference to disciples of Jesus (John 18:16, 19, 25). This means either that the concept of discipleship was a common enough phenomenon in first-century Palestine that it was part of the normal language of the people, or that Jesus was particularly associated with disciples.5
The next question to answer is: Why focus on John? The answer is simple. Of the four Gospel accounts, John uses the word disciple more than any other: a total of seventy-eight times. Discipleship plays a more prominent role in the Gospel according to John than in any other book of the Bible.
The Gospel according to John
In the Gospel according to John, we find two key words for John’s portrait of discipleship: believe and remain. He makes this especially
4. Meier, A Marginal Jew, 3:41.
5. See Meier, A Marginal Jew, 3:40–73. The Gospel according to John thrice mentions disciples of John the Baptist (John 1:35, 37; 3:25), and the Pharisees once refer to themselves as disciples of Moses (John 9:28). The Pharisees also had disciples, but these “disciples of the Pharisees” are mentioned in only two parallel passages, Mark 2:18 and Luke 5:33. Disciples of the Pharisees are not mentioned in John.
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clear in John 8:31, where “Jesus said to the Jews who had believed [pisteúō] in him, ‘If you remain [ménō] in my word, you are truly my disciples [mathētēs].’”6 A true disciple chooses to believe in Jesus, and this belief remains or abides through every struggle, always progressing toward a deeper faith. This doesn’t mean that the true disciple never struggles or never stumbles but that he chooses Jesus again and again.7
Bible scholar Craig S. Keener writes, “Frequently John mentions that many ‘believed’ in Jesus (2:23; 7:31; 10:42; 11:45; 12:11, 42), but at least in many of these cases this faith proves inadequate to persevere for salvation.”8 The main takeaway here is that true discipleship requires both believing and remaining in Jesus. It’s not enough for you and me to just believe that Jesus exists or that He works miracles. No; the deep joy promised by Jesus is for those disciples who come into relationship with Jesus and stay in relationship with Him—even through struggles, persecutions, and the repentance that is necessary when we fall short.
The Gospel presents real stories of real people who had real encounters with Jesus Christ and subsequently became His disciples. As we walk through the stories of those early disciples who believed and remained, we will encounter and explore what John presents as criteria for being a disciple of Jesus—namely believing (pisteúō) and remaining (ménō). These experiences of the first disciples show us how we ourselves can live that kind of discipleship.
6. RSV-2CE translation adjusted by the author, based upon the Greek text (NA28).
7. Michael J. Wilkins, “Disciples and Discipleship,” in Dictionary of Jesus and the Gospels, 2nd ed, ed. Joel B. Green, Jeannine K. Brown, and Nicholas Perrin (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2013), 211.
8. Craig S. Keener, The Gospel of John: A Commentary, vol. 1 (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2003), 746. See also pp. 276–79.
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Dynamics of Discipleship
Anchored by believing and remaining, there are four basic movements by which a person becomes and lives as a disciple of Jesus. First, the disciple begins to believe through some form of witness. The forms of witness include but are not limited to a prophetic sign, the word of another, the Scriptures, and inspiration from the Father. She then encounters Jesus in a personal way, either physically, as during Jesus’ earthly life, or after His Ascension into heaven, through the Spirit at work in the world. This personal encounter grounds and solidifies the disciple’s belief. Then, empowered by Jesus, the new disciple must choose to remain with Him, particularly through the suffering which inevitably comes (John 15:5; 9:34–38; 16:33). This is a mutual remaining that changes the focus of the disciple’s life. Now her first priority is her relationship with Jesus (John 6:56–57; 15:5). The disciple lives and acts not from her own power but from the power of Jesus, with the Father and the Spirit (John 14:1–3, 16–17; 15). Her true discipleship bears the fruit of practical love, which has the effect of building up the Church and witnessing to other potential believers (John 8:31; 13:34–35; 15:16–17). Said another way, the basic dynamic of each person ’ s growth in discipleship goes something like this, with believing and remaining in Jesus at the core of our journey:
1. I begin to believe because someone gives witness to me. In other words, someone tells me who Jesus is and how a relationship with Him makes a practical difference in his own life.
2. I have a personal encounter with Jesus, which solidifies that belief. I literally meet Jesus. As He walked upon the earth, people met Him physically. Now, we meet Him through the Holy Spirit whom He has sent. We encounter Him as we pray, in our neighbor, as we read the Scriptures, and especially in the Eucharist.
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3. I choose to remain with Jesus, even through trials, temptations, and sufferings. I don’t stop praying, reading Scripture, or receiving the sacraments, even when I encounter doubt, discouragement, or persecutions from others. If I fall into mortal sin, I go immediately to Reconciliation. I grow closer to the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, sometimes in ways I can perceive and sometimes in ways that I can’t perceive in the moment.
4. Empowered by the Holy Spirit, my believing and remaining bear fruit in practical love that builds up the Church and witnesses to other potential believers. I use the gifts that God has given me to help my fellow disciples live in closer and closer relationship with Jesus, and I share my faith with those who are not disciples. I help the poor. I tell others who Jesus is and how a relationship with Him makes a practical difference in my own life.
All four of these movements are essential to discipleship but believing and remaining are the two hinge actions that make the rest possible. In fact, we will come to learn that remaining is the natural consequence and perfection of a person’s progress in faith/believing.
A Word about Language
The Gospel according to John (and the entire New Testament) was handed down to us in Greek. The Old Testament was written mostly in Hebrew, with some Greek and a little Aramaic. Reading our Bibles in English (a language that didn’t even exist at the time of the New Testament) two thousand years after the biblical texts were written means that some things are literally lost in translation. As we discover what the Holy Spirit inspired St. John to write concerning discipleship, it is important for us to pay attention to the actual words St. John selected. Specific words aren ’ t the only way an author
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communicates meaning—he also uses actions and context—but the words themselves are an important indication of the author’s intention.
The Greek verb for “believe” is pisteúō. However, pisteúō can also mean “ trust ” in the sense of “ to entrust oneself to an entity in complete confidence” or “ entrust ” as in “I entrust this precious family heirloom to you so that you might keep it safe.” It can also mean “be confident about” or “think/consider possible.” The nominal (noun) form of this word is pístis, commonly translated into English as “faith” or “belief,” but sometimes meaning “ trust, confidence, a pledge, or a commitment.”9 As we read our English Bibles, it is easy to miss some of the nuance of the Bible’s meaning because using different English words unintentionally hides the fact that these concepts are expressed by the same word in Greek and are therefore very closely connected.
For “remain,” we have a similar problem. The Greek verb ménō can be translated “remain, stay, abide, live, persist,” and the like. The noun form is mónē, which in John means “ a state of remaining in an area, staying, tarrying” or “ a place where one stays, dwelling(-place), room, abode.”10 With these variations in language, even the most attentive reader of the Gospel in English will miss the connection between John 1:38, where Andrew and the other disciple ask Jesus, “Where do you live [ménō]?” and John 14:2, where Jesus tells us, “In my Father’s house are many rooms [mónē]; if it were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you?”
The fact is that these are different forms of the same word. At the beginning of the Gospel, Jesus’ first disciples express their sprouting desire to live/remain with Jesus and, near the end of the Gospel, Jesus
9. See F. W. Danker, ed., A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature, 3rd ed. (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2000), 816–20, henceforth cited as BDAG.
10. See BDAG, 630–31, 658.
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reveals that He has had a place prepared this whole time where He wants His disciples to live/remain with Him. This is the point of the whole Gospel, from beginning to end: Jesus comes to make true disciples who, having believed in Him, remain in the Heavenly communion that He shares with the Father and the Holy Spirit. It was only by reading John 14 in the original Greek that I myself was able to see this connection for the first time.
Getting the Most out of Remaining with Jesus
This book is set up to help us live our own discipleship. And discipleship only happens in relationship, first with Jesus, then almost always with fellow Christians here on earth. Every chapter ends with (1) a prayer to bring to Jesus what we ’ ve learned and ask Him for the help we need to live it; and (2) questions to discuss in small-group Bible study. You can meet once per week. You can meet once per month. You can meet in person or virtually. However you do it, the best way to live what you are learning is to come together with fellow disciples so that you can help one another in your journeys. If it isn’t possible for you to get together with others, at least take some time to think about the questions on your own—maybe this can be part of your prayer time. Please do spend time writing down at least some of your answers. There’s something about writing that makes things stick in our minds and hearts. Don’t skip the prayer; actually pray it. And don’t skip the questions; let Jesus speak to your heart through the words of His Gospel. Finally, if you ’ re up for leading a small group but have questions about how to do it, turn to pages 87–88 for some tips.
Now that we know the basics, let’s dive in to the first encounter between Jesus and His disciples. But first, I invite you to take a moment to pray. If you decide to pray these prayers with your Bible study group, change I to we, me to us, and my to our:
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Let us pray: Lord Jesus, You have called me to be Your disciple and have given me many examples to imitate. Aided by the prayers of the holy men and women whom I will meet in the pages of this book, give me the gift of faith, that I might believe in You, and the gift of courage, that I might remain with You. May I encounter You today. Teach me, dear Jesus, how to love my neighbor as myself for love of You. Amen.
GOING DEEPER
Answers or possible answers are found on pages 89–90 But ponder the questions for yourself or share with your Bible study group before giving the answers a look.
• Where do you find yourself as we begin our journey together? What do you want out of this Bible study? What do you think when you hear the word disciple right now?
• In which books of the New Testament is the word disciple used? In which book does the word disciple appear most frequently? According to this chapter, what does this tell us about the use of the word disciple in the time of Jesus? Read John 8:31; then discuss these questions in your group or ponder them on your own.
• According to John 8:31, what are the two central things that a true disciple does? What do you think when you hear the word believe right now? The word remain?
• According to pages 8–9 above, what are the four basic dynamics of a person’s growth in discipleship? How does this describe your experience of discipleship?
• What are you most excited about as we begin to learn about discipleship together? How can the people in your Bible study (or your other friends) pray for you?
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